The twice-yearly RedMonk index ranked Ruby at eighth, the lowest position ever for the language. “Swift and now Kotlin are the obvious choices for native mobile development. Go, Rust, and others are clearer modern choices for infrastructure,” said RedMonk analyst Stephen O’Grady. “The web, meanwhile, where Ruby really made its mark with Rails, is now an aggressively competitive and crowded field.”

Although O’Grady noted that Ruby remains “tremendously popular,” participants on sites such as Hacker News and Quora have increasingly questioned whether Ruby is dying. In the Redmonk rankings, Ruby peaked at fourth place in 2013, reinforcing the perception is in decline, if a slow one.

The rankings were:

JavaScript

Java

Python

PHP

C#

C++

CSS

Ruby

C

Objective-C

RedMonk’s rankings are based on a formula that examines pull requests on GitHub as well as language discussions on Stack Overflow. The RedMonk rankings’ methodolog differs from those used in the monthly Tiobe and PyPL language popularity rankings, which use formulas based on internet searches.

This story, "Ruby’s decline in popularity may be permanent" was originally published by
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